1.ABC Plugs "International Women's Day" Over Tom DeLay's Victory
Of the three broadcast network evening newscasts on Wednesday night, only the NBC Nightly News found Tom DeLay's Tuesday primary victory, which he won by a wide enough margin to avoid a runoff, newsworthy. Anchor Brian Williams gave 35 seconds to DeLay's 62 percent vote in "his first election test since being indicted on campaign finance charges last year." While ABC's Elizabeth Vargas found no time for DeLay, she managed to highlight how Wednesday was the UN-decreed "International Women's Day" and how in Belgium roses were given to "women on the European Commission" while "the UN issued a sobering study: Women fill about 16 percent of the world's legislative seats. Not much change in 30 years." The CBS Evening News skipped DeLay, but ran a story promoting Microsoft's new "Origami" hand-held computer device.

2.Desertions Down; USA Today's Spin: "8,000 Desert During Iraq War"
A front page USA Today article on Tuesday reported how "the overall desertion rate" from the armed forces "has plunged since the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001" and the 2005 rate represents "0.24% of the 1.4 million U.S. forces" compared to a 3.4 percent desertion rate during the Vietnam war. Nonetheless, USA Today headlined its story, "8,000 desert during Iraq war," and reporter Bill Nichols related how "some lawyers who represent deserters say the war in Iraq is driving more soldiers to question their service." Later in the story, Nichols noted that, in fact, "there is only one known case of desertion in Iraq." Commenting on USA Today's spin, on Wednesday, OpinionJournal.com's James Taranto observed: "Many in the press seem determined to follow their Iraq-as-Vietnam script, whether or not it's consistent with the facts."

3.CNN's Roberts: Dana Reeve's Kerry Endorsement Was "Poignant"
Most of the television news story on the passing of Dana Reeve noted her work to get federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, but CNN's John Roberts, fresh from CBS News, was the most enthusiastic, imbuing "poignant" meaning to her 2004 endorsement of John Kerry. On Tuesday's The Situation Room, Roberts noted how "up until her death she carried on Christopher Reeve's legacy as an advocate of embryonic stem cell research." Viewers then saw a clip of her endorsing Kerry: "I am here today because John Kerry, like Christopher Reeve, believes in keeping our hope alive." Roberts then suggested: "It may have been Dana Reeve's most powerful and poignant political statement. In October of 2004, just two weeks after Christopher Reeve's death, she came out of mourning to publicly endorse Senator John Kerry's presidential campaign." The next day, on Wednesday's American Morning, Roberts set up the same soundbite from Reeves: "Just two weeks after Christopher's death, she became the symbol of his strength and spirit, signing on to John Kerry's presidential campaign."

4.Lauer Empathizes with "Set Up" Teacher Who Likened Bush to Hitler
Interviewing Colorado geography teacher Jay Bennish, who was suspended after one of his high school students recorded him comparing President Bush with Adolph Hitler, Today co-host Matt Lauer on Tuesday sympathized with him over how the student and his parents "didn't go to the school board with this tape," but instead "basically shopped it around to conservative media outlets and when they finally released it to one it created an uproar." As if those with a liberal agenda don't shop their ideas and books to Today, where they presume they will find receptive bookers. (Many conservative bloggers and FNC's Hannity & Colmes have focused attention on Bennish.) Lauer fretted that "on the tape you can hear Sean Allen," the student who recorded the class, "asking you questions that seem to be egging you on a little bit. Do you feel you were set up?"

5.Time Running Out to Buy Tickets to MRC's "DisHonors Awards"
Just three weeks until the MRC's annual "DisHonors Awards." This year they will be held Thursday, March 30 at the Grand Hyatt in Washington, DC. Seats are $250.00 each. It's always a fun evening where we turn the tables on the press corps and play video clips on big screens to mock and laugh at their biased reporting. Last year we ended up oversold, and though we've moved to a bigger venue this year to accommodate a larger crowd, it would be wise to buy very soon. As in this week.

Of the three broadcast network evening newscasts on Wednesday night, only the NBC Nightly News found Tom DeLay's Tuesday primary victory, which he won by a wide enough margin to avoid a runoff, newsworthy. Anchor Brian Williams gave 35 seconds to DeLay's 62 percent vote in "his first election test since being indicted on campaign finance charges last year." While ABC's Elizabeth Vargas found no time for DeLay, she managed to highlight how Wednesday was the UN-decreed "International Women's Day" and how in Belgium roses were given to "women on the European Commission" while "the UN issued a sobering study: Women fill about 16 percent of the world's legislative seats. Not much change in 30 years." The CBS Evening News skipped DeLay, but ran a story promoting Microsoft's new "Origami" hand-held computer device.

Williams read this short item on the March 8 NBC Nightly News: "Former House Republican leader Tom DeLay won his primary race yesterday. It's his first election test since being indicted on campaign finance charges last year. DeLay pulled 62 percent of the vote against three different Republican challenger in his suburban Houston district. Analysts said today he faces a tougher challenge from an experienced Democrat in November."

On World News Tonight, solo anchor Elizabeth Vargas announced, over matching video: "This is International Women's Day. Around the world, women rallied for equal rights and better treatment. In Bangladesh, they protested the problem of men hurling acid at women, attacks that disfigure hundreds of them every year. In the Philippines, women rallied against alleged rapes by U.S. servicemen. And in Belgium, a different statement: Roses for women on the European Commission. The UN issued a sobering study: Women fill about 16 percent of the world's legislative seats. Not much change in 30 years."

As Vargas referred to the number of women in legislatures, anon-screen graphic, credited to the UN Commission on the Status of Women, listed 10.9% in 1975 compared to 16.3% in 2006.

A front page USA Today article on Tuesday reported how "the overall desertion rate" from the armed forces "has plunged since the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001" and the 2005 rate represents "0.24% of the 1.4 million U.S. forces" compared to a 3.4 percent desertion rate during the Vietnam war. Nonetheless, USA Today headlined its story, "8,000 desert during Iraq war," and reporter Bill Nichols related how "some lawyers who represent deserters say the war in Iraq is driving more soldiers to question their service." Later in the story, Nichols noted that, in fact, "there is only one known case of desertion in Iraq." Commenting on USA Today's spin, on Wednesday, OpinionJournal.com's James Taranto observed: "Many in the press seem determined to follow their Iraq-as-Vietnam script, whether or not it's consistent with the facts."

While the online posting of the March 7 USA Today story carried just the "8,000 desert during Iraq war" headline, the hard copy of the paper also featured a subhead with the real news: "But overall desertions have fallen since 9/11."

An excerpt from the front page story by Bill Nichols:

At least 8,000 members of the all-volunteer U.S. military have deserted since the Iraq war began, Pentagon records show, although the overall desertion rate has plunged since the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001.

Since fall 2003, 4,387 Army soldiers, 3,454 Navy sailors and 82 Air Force personnel have deserted. The Marine Corps does not track the number of desertions each year but listed 1,455 Marines in desertion status last September, the end of fiscal 2005, says Capt. Jay Delarosa, a Marine Corps spokesman....

Some lawyers who represent deserters say the war in Iraq is driving more soldiers to question their service and that the Pentagon is cracking down on deserters.

"The last thing they want is for people to think...that this is like Vietnam," says Tod Ensign, head of Citizen Soldier, an anti-war group that offers legal aid to deserters.

Desertion numbers have dropped since 9/11. The Army, Navy and Air Force reported 7,978 desertions in 2001, compared with 3,456 in 2005. The Marine Corps showed 1,603 Marines in desertion status in 2001. That had declined by 148 in 2005.

The desertion rate was much higher during the Vietnam era. The Army saw a high of 33,094 deserters in 1971 -- 3.4% of the Army force. But there was a draft and the active-duty force was 2.7 million.

Desertions in 2005 represent 0.24% of the 1.4 million U.S. forces.

Opposition to the war prompts a small fraction of desertions, says Army spokeswoman Maj. Elizabeth Robbins. "People always desert, and most do it because they don't adapt well to the military," she says. The vast majority of desertions happen inside the USA, Robbins says. There is only one known case of desertion in Iraq....

Most of the television news story on the passing of Dana Reeve noted her work to get federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, but CNN's John Roberts, fresh from CBS News, was the most enthusiastic, imbuing "poignant" meaning to her 2004 endorsement of John Kerry. On Tuesday's The Situation Room, Roberts noted how "up until her death she carried on Christopher Reeve's legacy as an advocate of embryonic stem cell research." Viewers then saw a clip of her endorsing Kerry: "I am here today because John Kerry, like Christopher Reeve, believes in keeping our hope alive." Roberts then suggested: "It may have been Dana Reeve's most powerful and poignant political statement. In October of 2004, just two weeks after Christopher Reeve's death, she came out of mourning to publicly endorse Senator John Kerry's presidential campaign." The next day, on Wednesday's American Morning, Roberts set up the same soundbite from Reeves: "Just two weeks after Christopher's death, she became the symbol of his strength and spirit, signing on to John Kerry's presidential campaign."

Roberts also touted how "the stem cell research debate is not a strictly partisan one. Republican Senator Arlen Specter is a supporter of stem cell research..."

The MRC's Megan McCormack caught the two pieces from Roberts.

During the 4pm EST hour of the March 7 The Situation Room, which Roberts anchored from Washington with Wolf Blitzer in the Middle East, Roberts set up a look back at her life: "Dana Reeve is being remembered today as a source of inspiration. She faced her disease, her husband's paralyzing accident, and later, his death with courage. Dana Reeve died last night from lung cancer only about six months after she was diagnosed with the disease. She was just 44 years old and a nonsmoker. Up until her death she carried on Christopher Reeve's legacy as an advocate of embryonic stem cell research, and other medical advancements. Now, her friends and political allies already are picking up the torch for her." Dana Reeve at 2004 Kerry campaign event: "And I am here today because John Kerry, like Christopher Reeve, believes in keeping our hope alive." Roberts: "It may have been Dana Reeve's most powerful and poignant political statement. In October of 2004, just two weeks after Christopher Reeve's death, she came out of mourning to publicly endorse Senator John Kerry's presidential campaign." Senator John Kerry on the Senate floor: "I will never forget the grace and the strength that she showed that day and even a glow that she exuded in her love for Chris and her passion about the issue." Roberts: "It was a culmination of her evolution, from actress and wife of a movie star, to care giver for her paralyzed husband, to a well-known and respected advocate of stem cell research. In pursuing her cause, Dana Reeve aligned herself mostly with Democrats and against President Bush's strict limits on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research." Senator Tom Harkin, Iowa: "She was a, a, a great person to just come in and convince people of the necessity for stem cell research. She was so genuine." Roberts: "Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean issued a statement saying, 'The best way to honor Dana Reeve's life is to realize the full promise of scientific and medical research.' But the stem cell research debate is not a strictly partisan one. Republican Senator Arlen Specter is a supporter of stem cell research and a cancer survivor." Senator Arlen Specter: "We need to utilize federal funding on stem cell research, that could have cured Superman, could have cured Christopher Reeves, from his spinal cord injury. We need to take politics out of medical research and do more to save lives." Roberts concluded: "Dana Reeve said her husband imagined a world where politics would never get in the way of hope. But she learned to use the political process to try to achieve her goals. And now, though she and her husband are gone, they are likely to continue to be a force in the political debate."

Soledad O'Brien set up the version which ran on the March 8 American Morning: "Dana Reeve leaves a legacy of love and caring, and dogged determination, frankly, to help people with paralysis. She had her victories, and defeats too. But the scripting of her legacy isn't over yet. CNN's John Roberts has our story."

President George W. Bush: "And I thank the Congress for doubling the funding of the National Institutes of Health." John Roberts: "She was the image of grace and courage, and a powerful force on Capitol Hill. For nine years, Dana Reeve was her husband's constant companion, his tireless support system as he twisted arms in Congress. Just two weeks after Christopher's death, she became the symbol of his strength and spirit, signing on to John Kerry's presidential campaign." Dana Reeve, at 2004 Kerry event: "And I'm here today because John Kerry, like Christopher Reeve, believes in keeping our hope alive." Senator John Kerry, on the Senate floor: "I will never forget the grace and the strength that she showed that day, and even a glow that she exuded in her love for Chris and her passion about the issue." Roberts: "But her campaign went beyond partisan politics. She faced down reluctant lawmakers and built bridges across party lines." Senator Arlen Specter: "Oh, she was overwhelming. She looked like a movie star, and she spoke eloquently and was a very effective advocate." Roberts: "Spinal injury, paralysis and stem cell research were her causes. It was her story, her determination, some members of Congress say, that helped lead House members to defy the threat of a presidential veto and pass a bill that would expand funding for embryonic stem cell research." Senator Tom Harkin: "If it hadn't been for her, we would not have had the number of signatures on the stem cell bill that we have. I'm absolutely convinced of that." Roberts: "Her dual tragedy, losing her husband, only to be diagnosed with lung cancer, had a special resonance with lawmakers who faced their own mortality. Arlen Specter recently battled cancer." Specter: "President Nixon declared war on cancer in 1970. Had we devoted the resources to that war which we devote to other wars, perhaps Dana Reeves' life could have been saved, perhaps Arlen Specter wouldn't have gotten Hodgkins. We need to utilize federal funding on stem cell research that could have cured Superman, could have cured Christopher Reeves' from his spinal cord injury." Roberts: "But for all the political victories Dana and Christopher Reeve had, there were also setbacks. The Senate has yet to pass the stem cell bill, and just last month, in a cost-saving measure, the White House eliminated all federal funding for the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation. Senator Tom Harkin, a personal friend, told Dana's caregivers on Friday to pass along a promise." Harkin: "I'd love to talk to her again, but if I can't, just whisper one thing in her, in her ear for me. Tell her that we are going to put that money back. I guarantee it."

Interviewing Colorado geography teacher Jay Bennish, who was suspended after one of his high school students recorded him comparing President Bush with Adolph Hitler, Today co-host Matt Lauer on Tuesday sympathized with him over how the student and his parents "didn't go to the school board with this tape," but instead "basically shopped it around to conservative media outlets and when they finally released it to one it created an uproar." As if those with a liberal agenda don't shop their ideas and books to Today, where they presume they will find receptive bookers. (Many conservative bloggers and FNC's Hannity & Colmes have focused attention on Bennish.) Lauer fretted that "on the tape you can hear Sean Allen," the student who recorded the class, "asking you questions that seem to be egging you on a little bit. Do you feel you were set up?" In the geography class the day after the State of the Union address, Bennish had spewed: "'It's our duty as Americans to use the military to go out into the world and make the world like us.' Sounds a lot like the things Adolf Hitler used to say. 'We're the only ones who are right, everyone else is backwards and it's our job to conquer the world and make sure that they all live just like we want them to.' Now I'm not saying that Bush and Hitler are exactly the same. Obviously, they're not, okay? But there are some eerie similarities to the tones that they use."

An exchange from Today's "exclusive" in-studio segment with Bennish on March 7:

Lauer: "The, the, the family here, the, the student's family didn't go to the school board with this tape. They went-" Bennish: "They never, they never contacted me and they have still never contacted me with any type of concerns." Lauer: "They basically shopped it around to conservative media outlets and when they finally released it to one it created an uproar and on the tape you can hear Sean Allen asking you questions that seem to be egging you on a little bit. Do you feel you were set up?" Bennish: "Well you know the lecture initially was an introduction to world geography and we were covering very, you know stereotypical terms like mental mapping and cultural landscapes. And I was receiving questions from Sean as well as from other students trying to get me to respond to the State of the Union address that was the night before and I explained to the students that in the case of the State of the Union this is applicable to a world geography class because for many people around the world this speech might impact their lives more so than the speeches that their own, own leaders give."

For the transcript of the entire interview, and how Today set it up, as well as links to MP3 audio clips of Bennish in action teaching his class as posted by Michelle Malkin on her blog, check a Tuesday posting by the MRC's Geoff Dickens on our NewsBusters blog. Go to: newsbusters.org

Just three weeks until the MRC's annual "DisHonors Awards." This year they will be held Thursday, March 30 at the Grand Hyatt in Washington, DC. Seats are $250.00 each.

It's always a fun evening where we turn the tables on the press corps and play video clips on big screens to mock and laugh at their biased reporting. And you'll get to meet me and the rest of the staff behind CyberAlert!

Last year we ended up oversold, and though we've moved to a bigger venue this year to accommodate a larger crowd, it would be wise to buy very soon. As in this week.

To place a credit card order via either PayPal or the MRC's own credit card processing system, go to: www.mediaresearch.org

(Just enter a multiple of $250.00 for how many tickets you want; ie: if you want three seats, enter $750.00. You will receive an e-mail from us confirming your order. Tickets will not be mailed, but will be held at the event registration table for you.)

That page also has a order for you can print out and then mail in or fax, as well as the name, phone number and e-mail address for questions.

At each annual gala, we mockingly award the worst reporting of the year and then have a conservative leader accept the award in jest. Cal Thomas will again generously serve as Master of Ceremonies and this year we will feature a "Tribute to the American Military."

Past award galas have featured a who's who of conservative opinion leaders, from Ann Coulter to Laura Ingraham to Sean Hannity. This year we'll have Lawrence Kudlow, Tony Blankley and Mark Levin serving as award presenters. But we always have surprise participants, such as those who accept the awards. Two years ago Rush Limbaugh popped in. The year before, attendees were treated to the Charlie Daniels Band.

But the best reason to attend is to watch the videos of the nominated quotes and enjoy making fun of the media's misdirected left-wing reporting.

This year's award categories: Send Bush to Abu Ghraib Award Slam Uncle Sam Award Aaron Brown Memorial Award for the Stupidest Analysis Cindy Sheehan Media Hero Award The I'm Not a Geopolitical Genius But I Play One on TV Award

If you didn't attend last year, this is what you missed:

Cal Thomas, Sean Hannity, Ann Coulter, Neal Boortz, Zell Miller and T. Boone Pickens highlighted the presentations and acceptances of MRC's "2005 DisHonors Awards: Roasting the Most Outrageously Biased Liberal Reporters of 2004," which were presented on Thursday night, April 21, before an audience of more than 950 -- the MRC's largest crowd ever -- packed into the Grand Ballroom of the J.W. Marriott in Washington, D.C.

Following the presentation of the DisHonors Awards videos in five categories, a look at the Best of the Worst of Dan Rather and the audience picking the Quote of the Year, we presented a 12-minute video tribute to the Swift Boat Vets and POWs for Truth. MRC President L. Brent Bozell then honored a founder of the group, John O'Neill, with the MRC's Conservative of the Year Award.

DisHonors Awards winners were selected by a distinguished panel of 16 leading media observers, including Rush Limbaugh, who served as judges.

Cal Thomas, a syndicated columnist and host of FNC's After Hours with Cal Thomas, served as Master of Ceremonies. Sean Hannity, co-host of FNC's Hannity & Colmes and a national radio talk show host, was the first presenter of nominee videos and announcement of the winner, followed by author Ann Coulter and then Atlanta-based nationally-syndicated radio talk show host Neal Boortz.

In place of the journalist who won each award, a conservative accepted it in jest. Those standing in for the winners: Colin McNickle of the Pittsburgh Tribune Review, the target of Teresa Heinz Kerry's "shove it" remark; renowned businessman T. Boone Pickens; national radio talk show host Janet Parshall; Midge Decter, author and conservative intellectual; and former U.S. Senator Zell Miller.

The evening began with welcoming remarks from Cal Thomas, an invocation by Reverend Vincent Rigdon and the Pledge of Allegiance led by MRC Trustee Dick Eckburg.

After the second award category, we paid tribute to Reed Irvine, the founder of Accuracy in Media who passed away last year, and then Ann Coulter narrated a video review of Dan Rather's worst bias. Later, Cal Thomas urged the audience to put Peter Jennings in their prayers. To introduce acceptor Colin McNickle, attendees watched videos of Teresa Heinz Kerry's "shove it" attack of him and, leading into Zell Miller, attendees were treated to video of the Miller/Chris Matthews "duel" exchange from MSNBC's Republican convention coverage.

END Reprint of Summary of last year's event

To watch RealPlayer video of all of last year's nominated quotes and of the award presentations by Hannity, Coulter and Boortz, check: www.mediaresearch.org

Federal employees and military personnel can donate to the Media Research Center through the Combined Federal Campaign or CFC. To donate to the MRC, use CFC #12489. Visit the CFC website for more information about giving opportunities in your workplace.